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Q: When your child lies
to you, it hurts. As parents, it makes us angry and we
take it personally. We feel like we can never trust our
child again. Why does lying cause such anger, pain and
worry for parents?
James: Parents are understandably very afraid of their
children getting hurt and getting into trouble, but they
have very little protection against these things as they
send their kids out into the world. Kids learn from
other kids and from the media, and it makes parents feel
unsafe because they can’t control the information and
ideas that are being presented to their children.
Let’s face it. Information isn’t just available to our
kids; it’s injected into them. Bad ideas are pushed down
our kid’s throats by their peers, by some adults, by the
media. It’s hard for a parent to keep control of their
kids when this is happening, and protect them from their
own harmful impulses and dangerous outside influences.
Your kid’s honesty becomes the connector between what’s
happening to him on the outside world and what happens
at home. You need him to tell you honestly what happened
today, so that you can honestly decide if that’s best
for him.
Don’t make it a moral issue. Make it a technical issue.
The good kids are lying just like the bad kids. You
broke the law. You broke the rules. These are your
consequences.
You need to hear that information in order to decide if
that’s going to help him meet his responsibilities now
--and in the future. When parents don’t get the right
information, they’re afraid they’ll make the wrong
choices for their kids.
When your kid lies, you start to see him as “sneaky,”
especially if he continues to lie to you. You feel that
he’s going behind your back, that he’s undermining you.
We begin to think that our kids are “bad.” We make the
connection that if lying is bad, liars are bad. It’s
just that simple.
Parents should hold their kids responsible for lying.
But the mistake parents make is when they start to blame
the kid for lying. It’s considered immoral to lie. But
when you look at your kid like he’s a sneak and an
operator who’s undermining your authority, it’s a
slippery slope that starts with “You lie” and ends up at
“You’re a bad person.” I think that perception of your
kid promotes more lying. If your child thinks you think
he’s “bad,” he’s going to hide the truth from you even
more, because he doesn’t want be bad. Even though they
are lying, kids don’t want to disappoint their parents.
Q: Let’s look at it from the child’s perspective.
What’s going in on a child’s mind when they lie to their
parents?
James: Say you’re driving on the interstate and the
speed limit is 65 mph. You know that if you drive 65 mph
on the interstate, that’s the slowest anyone drives, and
people fly by you, honk at you and call you names. So
you go 75 miles an hour…and a policeman stops you. He
says, “Ms. Jones, how fast were you driving?” And most
people say, “Sixty five.” Or, “I thought I was doing
sixty five, officer, or maybe a little over sixty five.”
Why are people dishonest like that? Because they
understand that driving fast is forbidden. But they
don’t understand that it’s hurtful. We understand that
it’s wrong to drive that fast and there are
consequences. But we don’t understand that it really
hurts anybody and that it puts people at risk.
It’s the same with kids. They know lying is forbidden.
But they don’t see it as hurtful. Not the way that
parents see it as hurtful. So a kid will say, “I know
it’s wrong that I ate a sugar snack when I’m not
supposed to. But who does it hurt?” “I know it’s wrong
that I traded my dried fruit for a Twinkie. But it
doesn’t really hurt anybody. I can handle it. What’s the
big deal?” That’s what the kid sees.
When they don’t see it as hurtful, there are two
different value systems operating: the family’s value
system that says this is forbidden and the kid’s value
system that says if it’s not hurting anybody, what do
you care? The kid rationalizes his actions and justifies
his behavior with the idea that it doesn’t hurt anybody.
The outcome is a dishonest situation. A lie.
When you get to adolescence, of course, the stakes get
much higher. But the thinking remains the same. Kids
smoke pot and drink and say, “Well it doesn’t hurt
anybody. My friends smoke pot and it doesn’t hurt them.
I know drinking’s wrong, but my parents drink and it
doesn’t hurt them. I can handle it. I’m older than my
parents think I am.” They know it’s forbidden. They
either don’t see it as hurtful, or they rationalize the
hurt away.
Q: So what’s the best way for parents to deal with
lying, so that they don’t feel hurt and resentful about
it and so that the child learns not to lie?
James: The first thing you have to do is be careful of
is giving lies too much power. If you have a kid who’s
angry at you or who feels frustrated and powerless, and
if he thinks he can get power over you by telling you a
lie, he’ll use dishonesty to get that power. He’ll
withhold information and lie by omission when you’re
trying to get the truth. He’ll give you little pieces of
information, and that makes him feel powerful. It’s a
trap for parents. Honesty is important, but if you
communicate that too strongly to your children, they
will use that to have power over you. You have to keep
these things a certain size so that they’re not used
against you.
The second thing to remember is that you have to
understand the power of the culture that kids go into.
It’s a very powerful culture that exerts a lot of
pressure to “fit in.” They may feel guilty if they lie
to their parents. But, again, they’re thinking, “This
isn’t that hurtful, and my parents just don’t
understand.” Of course, parents do understand. They’re
frightened, and they should be.
So I think that parents have to assume that kids are
going to tell them lies, because they’re immature and
they don’t understand how hurtful these things are.
They’re also drawn towards excitement, and their parents
aren’t. It’s not like the good kids aren’t drawn to
excitement and risk, and the bad kids are. It’s not that
the good kids don’t lie and the bad kids do lie. They’re
all drawn to excitement, and they’ll all have a tendency
to distort the truth because they’re kids.
I think parents have to deal with lying the way a cop
deals with speeding. If you’re going too fast, he gives
you a ticket. He’s not interested in a lot of
explanations from you. He’s just going to give you a
consequence. Look at it the same way with your child. He
didn’t tell the truth, whether the truth was distorted,
omitted or withheld. There should simply be consequences
for that. The first time you lie, you go to bed an hour
early. The second time, you lose your phone. It should
be something that the kid feels. You lose your phone for
twenty four hours. You lose your phone for two days. You
lose computer time or TV time.
The consequences have to make the child uncomfortable or
they don’t change anything. The idea is that the next
time he’s faced with telling you the truth or lying,
he’ll recall how uncomfortable he was when he did the
consequence for lying, and he’ll tell you the truth
instead.
The consequence should be about the lying. If there’s a
separate consequence for the incident, that should come
down separately. If you come home later than your curfew
and you tell me the truth, you may still lose going out
Friday night, but you won’t lose your phone. If you lie
to me, you lose both.
Parents should not get into the morality of it. Just be
clear. Lying is wrong, it’s hurtful and, in our home, we
tell the truth. But don’t make it a moral issue. Make it
a technical issue. You broke the law. You broke the
rules. These are your consequences.
When a cop writes me a ticket, he doesn’t follow me home
or argue with me. He hands me my ticket and he drives
away. Approach the consequences for lying the same way.
Don’t argue about it or get into a big discussion.
Discuss it in a structured way: “What were you trying to
accomplish by doing that?” Not “Why did you lie? You
know how much lying hurts me.” Just ask what he was
trying to accomplish, then point out that lying is not
the way to solve his problem. Compliance is the way to
solve it. Talk about it after things have cooled down,
not in the heat of the moment. Explain what will happen
if he lies again. “If you lie to me about the dance,
you're not going to the next dance and I’m taking your
phone for twenty four hours.” Just keep it really
simple.
James Lehman is a behavioral therapist and the
creator of The Total Transformation Program for parents.
He has worked with troubled teens and children for three
decades. James holds a Masters Degree in Social Work
from Boston University. This article first appeared in
Empowering Parents. Used with kind permission. |